Improving food access and farm viability in Buffalo-Niagara UB Food Systems Planning and Healthy Communities Lab
Growing Together
What is Growing Together?
• A report on food in Buffalo-Niagara
• A part of One Region Forward
• A reflection of community concerns about and goals for the region’s food system
• Make fresh food more equitably accessible
• Ensure the food system, especially the agriculture sector, is creating viable jobs
• Strengthen connections between growers and the public
Goals for the region
What we’ve covered Context:
• Farmland, farming, and farmers
• Food access and healthy eating
• Connecting producers and consumers
Also in the report Context:
• Farmer interviews
• Food store assessment
• Policy framework
• Analysis
Three analyses
• Who has limited food access?
• How self-reliant is our region in growing what we need to eat?
• How much can we expand farmland?
Analysis 1 Who has Limited Food Access?
Our questions
How many households do not own a car and live further than average walking distance from a supermarket? How many households live further than average driving distance to supermarkets?
55,954 households, or 12% of the region’s households, are without a car and do not live within walking distance of a supermarket
Who has limited food access?
53,062 households - 11% of all households - live further than average driving distance to supermarkets
Who has limited food access?
What this means for the region
Healthy food costs more for these households
• Transportation to supermarkets
• Healthy food at more proximate convenience stores and grocery stores
Analysis 2 Are we growing what we need to eat?
Our questions How self-reliant is the Buffalo-Niagara region in producing the food the residents need? If everyone in the region wanted to buy healthy, local food, how much of that demand could currently be met?
Self-reliance
The share of our population’s demand for fruits and vegetables that our farmers grow Current self-reliance: • 67% of fruits and vegetables
Self reliance if we ate a healthy diet: • 38% of fruits and vegetables
• 1% for dark green vegetables, 10% for red &
orange vegetables, and 34% fruit
35,574 acres short of farmland to reach full self-reliance
Source: USDA Cropland Data Layer, 2012
Analysis 3 How much can we expand farmland?
Our question How much land is available and suitable for farming in the region?
Based on soil and slope alone, 143,753 acres of land are not being farmed now and would be suitable for farming.
Expanding farming
11,739 acres of this land is vacant or publicly-owned and undeveloped.
Expanding farming
Questions?
Next Steps • Connect the food system with other
community systems • What are the implications of our ideas
for other working groups?
Food
Land Use
Transportation
Housing
Climate Change
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